Hello !Sorry for the long delay (delayWeeks(), a new Arduino function... , butI was waiting for my Z80 - and other electronic stuff - from Jameco (which costed me 44 € for shipping PLUS44 € for customs... ouch... never again !), and then I became father for the second time... So I'm just beginningto have a little spare time for me again, before going back to work tomorrow (ouch again). While waiting for the Z80, I made some tests with a 6502, and it worked perfectly. So, I've done the same testswith the new Z80, and it works great.- I've bought a 1Mhz oscillator, but it's too fast for the Arduino to keep up the pace, even with a basic test.So I'm still using the Arduino as the source of CLK.- The Arduino plays the role of an memory simulator (using the Arduino RAM for the Z80). For the time being,I write my Z80 code and compile it on PC, then insert it into a byte array in the Arduino code.(eg: char bytes[]={0x3E,0x20,0xD3,0,0x3C,0xC3,2,0};). Every time the Z80 requests a byte from memory, it is takenfrom this array. Thank you Rob for the suggestion.- It also serves as an I/O IC simulator : every time the Z80 outs a byte to 0, the Arduino sends itback to the PC via Serial and then I can display it on my PC screen. I will use the same mechanism, inthe opposite direction, to provide a virtual keyboard to my Z80 computer.

Things I'd like to do now:- use a real memory instead of the Arduino. Since I don't have an EEPROM programmer, I'm trying to use a NVRAMbut for now, it doesn't work (whenever I reset my circuit, some bytes - sometimes a lot- from the NVRAM get corrupted, don't knowwhy. Maybe a write occurs during the RESET with the WriteEnabled pin unstable ?). When it will work, I will set up a assembly chain,so that I can write code on my pc, then assemble and download it into the NVRAM, with some kind of bootloader at the start of theNVRAM (the Arduino will "listen" to IORQ queries on address X, and provide the data to the bootloader so it can write it into RAM - don'tknow if I'm clear !?)- use latches to provide more than 64 kbytes of memory (switching banks)- connect a parallel 40x2 LCD display directly to the Z80, so it can output text by itself- build or connect some kind of keyboard.- connect some kind of mass storage. I've only a few ideas right now, like using the SPI interface of an SD-card.- connect it to a VGA monitor. The tricky part for me, right now.then...- write an O/S (multitask would be great, but is it possible without hardware NMI ?) and maybe a compiler before (or use some kind of C compiler for Z80,like SDCC)- make it multi-processor - etc, etc...

Well, that's a lot to do ! It will eventually require a few years...Thank you again for your advices and help !

cr0sh : sorry, I did'nt have enough time to explain why I'm doing this.- first, I didn't know you could still find DIP40 Z80 (I knew of the Rabbit one, but where's the fun ?)- I'm not interested in repairing it to have it work (I've had a 6128 CPC Amstrad, in the 80's, and emulators are enough for me) - it's really for the sake of the educational value : I've always wanted to design and build my own computer,but I work in the software businness, which is a really separate world (when you don't work with embedded devices).- I was sure the Amstrad was in bad condition. When people sell you this kind of stuff, at a very low price, and withoutthe power cord (because they "could'nt find it"), 99 % of the time it's because it's not working anymore.

Z80s as microcontrollers now exist, if that matters to you. Zilog makes "eZ80", Z8 "Neo", and "Z16" (16 bit architecture) as well as 8051 microcontrollers. You may be able to sample them. They also provide a free compiler and a very cheap programmer.

http://www.digikey.com/product-search/en/integrated-circuits-ics/embedded-microcontrollers/2556109?k=ez80http://www.digikey.com/product-detail/en/ZUSBSC00100ZACG/269-4539-ND/1206981Compiler/IDE: Search for "ZDS II - eZ80Acclaim! version 5.2.1 with RZK and TCP/IP Object Code" on Google (it's at the Zilog Store but there is no direct link).

I was able to get simple projects running with the Z8 Encore, eZ80, and the Z16 microcontrollers using the linked programmer and the free software.

I have only come here seeking knowledge. Things they would not teach me of in college.

Last I looked (maybe a year ago) you could still buy all the Z80 chips, SIO, PIO, CTC, etc etc. Over that period I have designed several modern boards with LPCs/SAMs etc but they all get too complicated for a one-man band to develop and produce in a reasonable time frame, and of course they are out of date two weeks later and also there are so many great 32-bit boards around now for about $1.50 I see little point in producing yet another one.

So, maybe the answer is to go retro, after all there won't be any competition

A Z80 board with an AVR co-processor that acts as an EPROM emulator would be a simple and fun project, but the question is what the heck would you do with it? Once you get it working and flashing a few LEDs what's next?

If I could think of an answer it might be worth doing.

@Joe, that $29 dev kit is "Z8 Encore! XP F08xA Series Dev Kit" but lower down it also says "For Use With/Related Products Z8 Encore!®, Z8 Encore! XP®, eZ80Acclaim!®, ZNEO™ Dev Boards" so I guess that's the compiler/assembler one could use for the Z80.

Is that correct?

So for the Z80 you would not use the hardware in that kit, just the IDE/compiler?